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great - where u prefer - me to come towards u - places u mentioned - can I get away with stuff there - do they have layby/woods - for my cock balls and arse hole fully on show? or best near me at hogs back?

today should be possible yeah- love to show it all off to u - early afternoon am free. when u say my place - u mean hogs back and layby? or at my house? what would u like to see me do today? what would u love to watch me do?

Enter a month, day of month and a year to obtain the day of the week. For the weekday by the Julian or Gregorian calendars, click "Old Julian" or "Gregorian" respectively after inputting into the associated form / row. The output will appear in the yellow box below the two forms.

You should enter a numerical month, date of month and a year without spaces or other characters (e.g. 9 / 18 / 1783 without the forward slashes).

Fun Facts:

By the Julian calendar, leap years are those evenly divisible by 4 (e.g. 1896, 1900 and 1904). By the Gregorian calendar, leap years are those evenly divisible by 4 but not by 100 unless they are evenly divisible by 400 (e.g. 1996, 2000 and 2004 but neither 1900 nor 2100). Thus the two calendars are not always in agreement.

The Gregorian calendar or Western / Christian calendar is today's global standard, first implemented by Rome in 1582 but not by England until 1752; and Turkey didn't fully switch until 1927. So if you want the day of the week in old Rome or medieval Europe, then use the Julian form.